Tarawa Class Lha Parts

(Page 93) End item NSN parts page 93 of 283
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
114-6151A Vehicular Universal Joint Spider
008716818
114-6163 Vehicular Universal Joint Spider
008716818
114-6163A Vehicular Universal Joint Spider
008716818
114-6181A Vehicular Universal Joint Spider
008716818
114-7000 Universal Joint Parts Kit
007667607
114-7012 Universal Joint Parts Kit
007667607
114-7047 Universal Joint Parts Kit
007667607
114-7100 Universal Joint Parts Kit
007667607
114-7100A Universal Joint Parts Kit
007667607
114-7200 Universal Joint Parts Kit
007667607
114-7200A Universal Joint Parts Kit
007667607
114-7205 Universal Joint Parts Kit
007667607
114-7205A Universal Joint Parts Kit
007667607
114-7230 Universal Joint Parts Kit
007667607
114-7502-00 Ceramic Dielectr Fixed Capacitor
005245817
114-80021 Vehicular Universal Joint Spider
005858598
114-8205 Vehicular Universal Joint Spider
005858598
114-8212 Vehicular Universal Joint Spider
005858598
114-8212A Vehicular Universal Joint Spider
005858598
114117 Paper Dielectric Fixed Capacitor
001464793
Page: 93 ...

Tarawa Class Lha

Picture of Tarawa Class Lha

The Tarawa class was a ship class of amphibious assault ships/LHA operated by the United States Navy (USN). Five ships were built by Ingalls Shipbuilding between 1971 and 1980; another four ships were planned, but later canceled. As of March 2015, all vessels have been decommissioned. The class was replaced by the America-class amphibious assault ships from 2014 onward.

The vessels have a full load displacement of 39,967 tonnes (39,336 long tons; 44,056 short tons).

Propulsion is provided by two Combustion Engineering boilers, connected to two Westinghouse turbines.

As of 1998, the ships' armament consists of a Mark 49 RAM surface-to-air missile system, two Vulcan Phalanx close-in weapons systems, six Mark 242 25 mm automatic cannons, and eight 12.7 mm machine guns.

The number of helicopters carried by each vessel was up to 19 Sikorsky CH-53 Sea Stallions, 26 Boeing Vertol CH-46 Sea Knight, or a mix of the two.

The Tarawa-class ships are designed to embark a reinforced battalion of the United States Marine Corps and their equipment.

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